Opinion by
1 1 This case presents the issue of whether a trial court may apply the same standard in awarding attorney fees to prevailing employees and employers under the Colorado Wage Claim Act (CWCA), sections 84-101 to -123, C.R.S.2018. We conclude that it may not.
T 2 The legislative declaration contained in the 2007 CWCA amendments has been interpreted to mean that a prevailing employee is presumptively entitled to attorney fees under the CWCA. See Carruthers v. Carrier Access Corp.,
3 Plaintiff, Reid Lester, appeals the trial court's order denying him attorney fees under the CWCA, and its dismissal of his claims against defendant, Johnson Heating and Plumbing (JHP), under the alter ego theory. We reverse as to the denial of attorney fees and remand the case to the trial court with instructions to reconsider Lester's fee request. We affirm as to the dismissal of Lester's claims against JHP.
I. Background
1 4 Lester's appeal arises from a jury verdict awarding him $12,307.69 in unpaid compensation based on breach of an implied contract with defendant, The Career Building Academy (TCBA). TCBA is a Colorado nonprofit corporation that provides high school students with vocational training with an emphasis on residential construction.
T5 In 2011, Lester orally agreed to work as TCBA's chief operating officer. In exchange, Rick Johnson, the founder of TCBA, promised to pay Lester an annual salary of $150,000, of which $75,000 would be paid by TCBA, and the remaining $75,000 would be paid by JHP, a business owned and operated by Johnson.
1 6 During the first six months of Lester's employment, TCBA paid him only twice, totaling $7884 in gross pay for wages and compensation. Lester resigned, and sent a wage demand to TCBA pursuant to section 8-4-109(8)(a), C.R.8.2018.
T7 TCBA rejected Lester's demand, contending that Lester agreed to volunteer as TCBA's chief operating officer. Lester then filed a complaint against TCBA and JHP, seeking unpaid wages and compensation, as well as penalties and attorney fees under the CWCA.
18 A jury determined that Lester had entered into an implied contract with TCBA, and returned a verdict in favor of Lester for $12,807.69 in unpaid wages and compensation. However, the trial court dismissed Lester's claim against JHP.
19 Following the jury's verdict, Lester requested that the trial court award him statutory penalties and attorney fees under the CWCA. TCBA objected, contending that the CWCA did not apply to an implied contract. The court ordered the parties to brief this issue.
T 10 In his brief, Lester contended that he was an employee who was owed wages or compensation under the CWCA. Relying on Carruthers,
{11 The court agreed with Lester that CWCA applied to an implied contract; however, it denied his request for attorney fees. Specifically, the court applied the Carruthers factors used to determine an award of attorney fees to prevailing employers. The court acknowledged that Carruthers involved a different factual scenario, in which the prevailing employer, not employee, was seeking attorney fees. Nevertheless, it applied Car-ruthers, stating that the operative language in section 8-4-110(1) was the same for both
II. Attorney Fees to Prevailing Employee Under the CWCA
112 Lester contends that the trial court erred in applying the Carruthers factors to a prevailing employee who is presumptively entitled to an award of attorney fees. We agree.
A. Standard of Review
(13 While we ordinarily review a trial court's denial of attorney fees for an abuse of discretion, see Anderson v. Pursell,
114 In interpreting a statute, we must discern and effectuate the General Assembly's intent. See Ceja v. Lemire,
B. Analysis
T15 The CWCA allows an employee who has been terminated from employment to sue his or her former employer for earned wages and other compensation the employer has refused to pay. See § 8-4-109. An employee may recover wages and compensation under the CWCA if he or she complies with certain procedural steps. Car-ruthers, 251 P.B3d at 1202. If the employee complies with those steps and the employer refuses to pay, the employee may recover penalties in addition to the unpaid compensation. Id. R
{16 Section 8-4-110(1), as noted, allows the court to award costs and attorney fees to the prevailing party on a CWCA claim. 'As relevant here, the 2007 amended statute provides:
If, in any action, the employee fails to recover a greater sum than the amount tendered by the employer, the court may award the employer reasonable costs and attorney fees incurred in such action.... If, in any such action in which the employee seeks to recover any amount of wages or compensation, the employee recovers a sum greater than the amount tendered by the employer, the court may award the employee reasonable costs and attorney fees incurred in such action.
§ 8-4-110(1) (emphasis added).
{17 In Carruthers,
{18 In Graham v. Zurich American Insurance Co.,
119 As an initial matter, TCBA contends that Lester agreed to the application of these modified factors when it argued at trial that Graham controlled concerning the penalties and attorney fees awarded to a prevail- | ing employee under the CWCA. Thus, TCBA contends the trial court properly applied the Carruthers factors as enumerated in Gro-ham. We disagree.
120 Contrary to TCBA's contention, the record reveals that Lester did not agree to the application of the Carruthers or Graham factors. Instead, he relied on Grakaom to argue that courts, not juries, are required to determine or impose statutory penalties. See id. at 1 18. Moreover, the Grakam division identified certain Carruthers factors to guide trial courts only for the determination of appellate attorney fees. Id. at 1% 27-28. Consequently, the factors in Grakam do not apply here.
121 Nevertheless, the trial court followed Carruthers and applied its factors in determining an award of attorney fees to Lester as the prevailing employee. In doing so, the trial court did not acknowledge that the Car-ruthers division recognized that, unlike a prevailing employer, a prevailing employee is presumptively entitled to attorney fees under the CWCA. See
€ 22 While the trial court recognized that Carruthers applied only to prevailing employers, it erroneously concluded that the same standard applied to awards of attorney fees to prevailing employees and employers because the statute used the same operative language. Specifically, it stated that the CWCA used the same discretionary word "may" in allowing the court to determine an award of attorney fees to both prevailing employees and employers. Although the trial court correctly noted that the operative language is parallel, it did not consider the legislative declaration contained in the 2007 CWCA amendments.
123 Generally, we do not resort to a legislative declaration when a statute is unambiguous. See Portofino Corp. v. Bd. of Assessment Appeals,
T 24 While section 8-4-110(1) is not ambiguous as to whether a trial court has discretion to award costs and attorney fees to a prevailing employee, it is silent as to what factors a trial court should consider in making that decision. Thus, we look beyond section 8-4-110(1) to ascertain what considerations should guide the trial court. See
125 To ascertain and fulfill the General Assembly's intent in these cireumstances, we may consider a relevant legislative declaration. Portofino Corp.,
126 Where a legislative declaration seeks to clarify a statutory amendment, we may resort to such interpretive analysis to fulfill the General Assembly's intent. See id. (stating that the General Assembly's subsequent legislative declaration concerning the intent of an amended statute required the division to consider the declaration even though "the legal process would prohibit the judicial branch from resorting to interpretive analysis of otherwise straightforward statutory enactments").
127 A legislative declaration is an "explicit or formal statement or announcement about the legislation" that "indicates the problem the General Assembly is trying to address." Colo. Office of Legis. Legal Servs., Colorado Legislative Drafting Manual 2-40 (Feb.2014). While some legislative declarations are codified, the supreme court nevertheless treats those that are not as equal in authority. See Stamp v. Vail Corp.,
128 Here, the General Assembly wrote a legislative declaration, explaining the 2007 CWCA amendment. That legislative declaration provides that the General Assembly intended courts to interpret the "discretionary standard for awards of attorney fees and costs ... consistently with the [United States Supreme Court's] interpretation of the attorney fee provisions in the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. see.2000e."
29 In Newman v. Piggie Park Enterprises, Inc.,
130 A leading treatise on attorney fees supports the conclusion that under the Newman standard, a prevailing employee is entitled to recover attorney fees "'almost as a matter of course'" Mary Francis Derfner & Arthur D. Wolf, Court Awarded Attorney Fees 1 10.02[8][a] (2018) (quoting Dawson v. Pastrick,
131 Notwithstanding this expansive interpretation, a prevailing employee's presumptive entitlement to an attorney fee award is rebuttable. See Newman,
32 Consequently, the presumption in favor of awarding attorney fees to a prevailing plaintiff in civil rights cases is so strong that a denial by the trial court on the basis of "special circumstances" is rare and disfavored. Derfner & Wolf, 110.02[8][al. As relevant here, the General Assembly directed courts to use the Newman standard to incentivize employees to enforce their rights under the CWCA. See ch. 381, see. 1, 2007 Colo. Sess. Laws 1677.
$83 Thus, even when the trial court denies an award of attorney fees, a court of appeals "may reverse and require an award of fees when the finding of special cireum-stances" is unwarranted. Derfner & Wolf, ¶ 10.02{8][al; see also Raishevich v. Foster, 247 F.8d 337, 346-48 (2d Cir.2001); Libertad v. Sanches,
4 34 Here, the trial court erred because it did not apply the standard that a prevailing employee is presumptively entitled to an award of attorney fees.
35 Accordingly, we remand this issue to the trial court to determine whether Lester is entitled to an award of attorney fees based on the Newman standard.
136 Lester argues that in any event, the trial court applied three inappropriate factors in denying his request for attorney fees. We agree. _|
137 First, the court held that because TCBA is a nonprofit corporation, an award of attorney fees to Lester "would impose substantial hardship on this nonprofit entity and is contrary to public policy." However, courts may not consider this factor to deny attorney fees. Two courts have awarded prevailing employees attorney fees against their nonprofit employers, and have held that an employer's inability to pay is irrelevant to the determination of attorney fee awards under the CWCA. See, eg., Barufaldi v. Ocean City, Md. Chamber of Commerce, Inc.,
138 Second, the trial court found that TCBA acted in good faith, and, therefore, should not be penalized with an award of attorney fees to Lester. However, as noted, a trial court may not deny attorney fees to a prevailing employee simply because his or her employer acted in good faith. Roe, 124 F.8d at 1233
Third, the court considered Lester's position as a chief operating officer and found that TCBA's contention that "Lester was not an employee entitled to regular wages was largely persuasive," agreeing with TCBA that it was not unusual for officers to volunteer for nonprofit organizations. However, the trial court's findings contradicted the jury's finding that Lester was a paid employee under an implied contract with TCBA, and its own ruling that the CWCA applied to an implied contract. Therefore, the trial court's findings were in error.
[40 Because these factors do not constitute special cireumstances under the Newman standard, the trial court erred in relying on them. Therefore, on remand, the trial court may not consider these factors in deciding whether to award Lester attorney fees.
IV. Dismissal of Claims against JHP
141 Lester also contends that the trial court erred when it, sua sponte, dismissed his claims against JHP as a matter, of law and, in the alternative, in a directed verdict. We conclude there was no reversible error.
A. Standard of Review
142 Piercing the corporate veil involves a mixed question of law and fact. Martin v. Freeman,
B. Analysis
"48 The alter ego theory applies to all corporations, including nonprofit corporations. See Krystkowiak v. W.O. Brisben Cos., Inc.,
€44 Here, Lester alleged that JHP was the alter ego of TCBA, and therefore, JHP
In a bench ruling, the trial court stated that a nonprofit organization cannot have an alter ego because it does not have shareholders. Accordingly, the court dismissed Lester's claims against JHP. In doing so, the trial court erred. See id. at 867.
146 Nevertheless, we may affirm the trial court on different grounds. See Negron v. Golder,
V. Appellate Attorney Fees
T47 Last, Lester requests attorney fees incurred in this appeal.
148 CAR. provides for an award of appellate attorney fees when there is a legal basis for such an award. A prevailing employee may be entitled to appellate attorney fees under the CWCA. See Graham, 1127-28. Because Lester has prevailed in this appeal, he is presumptively entitled to an award of appellate attorney fees.
149 However, we disagree with the division in Grakam that a trial court should consider the modified Carruthers factors in determining an award of appellate attorney fees. See id. Accordingly, we remand this issue to the trial court. If the trial court decides that Lester is entitled to attorney fees in the trial court, Lester should also be awarded appellate attorney fees in accordance with the Newman standard discussed in this opinion. See Marks v. Koch,
VI. Conclusion
50 The portion of the judgment denying Lester attorney fees under the CWCA is reversed and the case is remanded to the trial court to consider Lester's request for attorney fees, both incurred in the trial court and on appeal, under the Newman standard. The portion of the judgment dismissing Lester's claim against JHP under the alter ego theory is affirmed.
. Section 8-4-109(3)(a), C.R.S.2013, states, "If an employer refuses to pay wages or compensation ... the employee or his or her designated agent shall make a written demand for the pay- ' ment within sixty days after the date of separation and shall state in the demand where such payment can be received."
. It also states that the "attorney fee provisions in federal civil rights statutes are intended to further the goal of ensuring that private parties enforce those laws, since 'few aggrieved parties would be in a position' to seek relief '[ilf successful plaintiffs were routinely forced to bear their own attorney's fees' Newman v. Piggie Park Enters., Inc.,
. The General Assembly's legislative declaration also provides "that the wage claim statute should be amended to create greater incentives for employers to promptly pay wages and compensation owed to current and former employees."
. At oral argument, counsel for TCBA acknowledged that a trial court may consider this legislative declaration when deciding whether to award costs and attorney fees to a prevailing employee under section 8-4-110(1), C.R.S.2013.
